Caption: PRX default Piece image
PRX default Piece image 

Electronic Stethoscope

From: KBIA
Length: 00:05:01

The history of the stethoscope and its electronic twist Read the full description.

Default-piece-image-2 This piece traces the stethoscope from the doctor who curled up a piece of paper into the shape of a tube to the electronic version allowing doctors to "bank" their patients heart beats. This piece ran last year on The Health Show and on KBIA.

To hear the full audio, sign up for a free PRX account or log in.

More from KBIA

Caption: PRX default Piece image

PRX Rural Issues Reporting Project: Rural Healthcare in the 2008 Election (00:04:57)
From: KBIA

What rural populations need when it comes to healthcare, and what politicians have to offer.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Missouri's "Quarter Guy" (00:04:50)
From: KBIA

A chat with the man in the middle of the Missouri quarter controversy.

Piece Description

This piece traces the stethoscope from the doctor who curled up a piece of paper into the shape of a tube to the electronic version allowing doctors to "bank" their patients heart beats. This piece ran last year on The Health Show and on KBIA.

2 Comments Atom Feed

Caption: PRX default User image

Review of Electronic Stethoscope

Good background history on the use of stethoscope. But story tended to focus just on one brand Littmann. There are other electronic stethoscopes available out in the market that do the same as the Littmann 4000. For example the Andromed Androscope i Stethos Electronic Stethoscope.

As a health care provider who just wants to hear better sounds - the digital amplification is all that I want. I don't care about the recording capability of the 2 stethoscopes that I listed. I wanted information about these types that might be in the market.

User image

Review of Electronic Stethoscope

A solid report on an intriguing history -- the creation of the stethoscope. Producer Catherine Welch does a credible job tracing the development of an important medical instrument. I enjoy pieces about little known history of something we take for granted. She has a variety of voices (one phoner unfortunately) and strong writing that keeps the listener thinking. There is a soq out for KBIA News which might need to be edited out. In future to make the modules more attractive to stations, producers might want to change their outcues to be more generic, "I'm...." This piece would work well on health or medical shows or news magazines that might want to follow up with local health stories. It's very evergreen and would interest most listeners.